Enabling poor rural people
to overcome poverty



Press release No.: IFAD/54/08

Rome, 28 October 2008 – Communities in Haiti suffering severe food insecurity are to be assisted by a USD 10.2 million package which will quickly boost Haiti’s battered agriculture sector.

The funds come at a time when Haiti is facing the double challenge of recovering from recent hurricanes, which the government estimates have caused at least USD 500 million in losses, and feeding its people, many of whom were facing food shortages even before the storms struck. 

The agreement was signed on 22 October 2008 between the Government of Haiti, and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) provided the funding.

In Haiti IFAD’s USD 10.2 million is being implemented through the FAO’s recently-established Initiative on Soaring Food Prices (ISFP), part of a larger package of assistance to poor smallholder farmers.

In Haiti smallholder farmers make up 80 percent of the agricultural workforce and many of them are facing severe under-nourishment.

The aim of the agricultural rescue package is to have a quick impact on local production, increase the availability of basic food products in the markets and strengthen food security in the population at large.

The assistance will boost agricultural production in the current and coming 2008-2009 agricultural season by supporting hundreds of thousands of small farmers and their families, who have been gravely affected by the increase of food prices. 

Over the past four years, food prices have increased by an average of 18 percent annually, affecting in particular staples such as rice and maize, as well as beans, oil and other basic foods. Both rural and urban populations have been severely affected by the crisis which has resulted in widespread hunger, economic crisis and social and political unrest.

Through the project, over 240 000 smallholder farmers will receive a package comprising, among other inputs, vegetable seeds, cereal seeds, manioc, sweet potato and banana plants. National capacity for seed production and other local agricultural organizations will be strengthened in an effort to improve food security across the country.

The project will be implemented, with immediate effect, over the coming 15 months.


IFAD was created 30 years ago to tackle rural poverty, a key consequence of the droughts and famines of the early 1970s. Since 1978, IFAD has invested more than US$10 billion in low-interest loans and grants that have helped over 400 million very poor rural women and men increase their incomes and provide for their families. IFAD is an international financial institution and a specialized United Nations agency. It is a global partnership of OECD, OPEC and other developing countries. Today, IFAD supports more than 200 programmes and projects in 85 developing countries and one territory.